On 1/5/2013 6:35 PM, Ross A. Finlayson wrote:> On Jan 4, 10:20 pm, Virgil <vir...@ligriv.com> wrote:>> In article>> <7850ae29-08d9-49ef-8c7b-e8979e037...@m4g2000pbd.googlegroups.com>,>> "Ross A. Finlayson" <ross.finlay...@gmail.com> wrote:>>>>> Consider the function that is the limit of functions f(n,d) = n/d, n =>>> 0, ..., d; n, d E N.>>>> You mean the zero function?>>>> For every n, the limit of f(n,d) as d -> oo is 0, so your limit function>> would have to be the zero function: f(n,oo) = 0 for all n.>> -->>> No, none of those is the zero function, and each d->oo has it so that> d/d = 1.